Recent advances in on-surface synthesis has allowed the selective fabrication of a number of prototypical types of graphene nanoribbons. The thereby achieved properties include width-dependent electronic band gaps in armchair graphene nanoribbons, edge-localized states in zigzag graphene nanoribbons and topological band engineering in width-modulated topological graphene nanoribbons. More recently, on-surface synthesis of magnetic nanographenes has been reported. Here, the spin originates from unpaired electrons present in nanographenes with controlled sublattice imbalance or topological frustration. The corresponding magnetic moments live in p-orbitals and are hence largely delocalized, which allows for chemical control over their exchange interaction when covalently linking several molecular building blocks. Here, I will present synthesis of various prototypical magnetic nanographenes and the possibility to covalently link them to form coupled spin systems where exchange coupling can exceed 100 meV. Using halogen-substituted precursors, we achieve the on-surface synthesis-based deterministic bottom-up fabrication of various spin chains including a triangulene spin-1 chain revealing the predicted Haldane gap and fractional excitations at the chain termini or a strictly alternating spin-½ chain with chemically engineered coupling strengths J1 and J2 . Scanning tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy is used to explore length- and site-dependent magnetic excitations. Furthermore, we apply hydrogenation to achieve spin site passivation and controlled tip-based local reactivation to fabricate and characterize specific spin patterns in one-dimensional spin chains and spin clusters.
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